Results for “cop or drop”
To buy or grab something, especially a hyped drop you've been waiting on.
To beg off, make excuses, or back down and apologize.
To sit down and post up somewhere — grab a spot and settle in.
Imaginary 'drug' you take to cope with a loss or disappointment through denial.
Everything's fine and in order, a smooth, satisfying word whose origin nobody can fully prove.
To deal with disappointment by making excuses or denying reality — often used to mock someone.
A Jazz Age layabout, a young man who slept all day and dodged work, the original slacker.
Mature content — open to view.
To release new music — and as a noun, the moment a beat kicks in and the song explodes.
The moment a track's tension breaks and the bass and beat slam back in.
To spend a large amount of money on something, no flinching.
To move around quietly, often up to something or scoping a situation out.
To hang out and relax, or to drop a verse, depending on how you're using it.
Buying more when the price drops, betting the asset recovers — bargain hunting the red.
A genuinely jaw-dropping, hype-worthy moment that makes chat lose its mind.
A jaw-droppingly glamorous, knockout-gorgeous woman — old-Hollywood energy.
Verlan for 'pourri' (rotten) — specifically a corrupt cop on the take.
Top-tier near-flawless diamonds — the clarity grade rappers name-drop to flex how clean their ice is.
In 'laisse beton', verlan for 'laisse tomber' (drop it / forget it).
Verlan for 'flic' (cop) — the standard banlieue word for a police officer.
Leave it, forget it, or let it go — a plea to drop something.
A K-pop group's new release era — not a return from a break, just the next drop.
The involuntary scrunched-up face you make when a heavy bass drop hits.
Someone who buys hyped brands and drops just to flex, often chasing clout over real taste.